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Buyers' anxiety about questionable property titles, as a foreclosure freeze expands across the U.S., could further depress a housing market that is already in big trouble, experts said. A lack of confidence in the legality of the process used by lenders to repossess homes will have a major impact because the market is already flooded with foreclosed properties, they said. The nation's largest lender, Bank of America, has extended its moratorium on foreclosures to all 50 states.

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Buyers' anxiety about questionable property titles, as a foreclosure freeze expands across the U.S., could further depress a housing market that is already in big trouble, experts said. A lack of confidence in the legality of the process used by lenders to repossess homes will have a major impact because the market is already flooded with foreclosed properties, they said. The nation's largest lender, Bank of America, has extended its moratorium on foreclosures to all 50 states.

Buyers' anxiety about questionable property titles, as a foreclosure freeze expands across the U.S., could further depress a housing market that is already in big trouble, experts said. A lack of confidence in the legality of the process used by lenders to repossess homes will have a major impact because the market is already flooded with foreclosed properties, they said. The nation's largest lender, Bank of America, has extended its moratorium on foreclosures to all 50 states.

The Orinda City Council in California will allow activist group Quiet Orinda to make its case for a leaf-blower ban in November. The group claims that particulate matter and exhaust emitted by the devices add to air pollution.

Buyers' anxiety about questionable property titles, as a foreclosure freeze expands across the U.S., could further depress a housing market that is already in big trouble, experts said. A lack of confidence in the legality of the process used by lenders to repossess homes will have a major impact because the market is already flooded with foreclosed properties, they said. The nation's largest lender, Bank of America, has extended its moratorium on foreclosures to all 50 states.

Home buyers' anxiety about questionable property titles, as a foreclosure freeze expands across the U.S., could further depress a housing market that is already in big trouble, experts say. A lack of confidence in the legality of the process used by lenders to repossess homes will have a major effect because the market is already loaded with foreclosed properties, they said.